How Science So Often Devolves into Quick Fixes and Quackery
One mistake we make is to assume that the people who shout the loudest about their research must thus be right, or even know what they’re talking about.
One mistake we make is to assume that the people who shout the loudest about their research must thus be right, or even know what they’re talking about.
We wrap up our look at Murray Rothbard's sprawling two volume An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought with Dr. Joe Salerno, Rothbard's friend and colleague.
Kay and King have written an impressive and erudite book with several key areas of agreement with Austrians. Moreover, the authors help us better see the shortcomings of the Chicago School.
From the "lost decade" to today's conflicts with China, Japan's experience can help us understand much about geopolitics and political economy.
The author illustrate how Austrian ideas—value subjectivity, consumer sovereignty, capital allocation, entrepreneurship, etc.—can be useful “to practical management problems” in teaching and consulting.
In a special live seminar, Jeff Deist and Bob Murphy discuss Mises's views on interventionism and their continued relevance today, particularly after the last year and a half of economic intervention resulting from covid tyranny.
Was Rothbard's harsh criticism of Adam Smith justified, or was Smith actually an early and valiant proponent of laissez-faire? Hunter Hastings and Jonathan Newman join Jeff Deist to discuss.
Pascal Salin has written an important new book which shows how by its very nature, the tax state can never be a just state. When it taxes its citizens, it is willy-nilly arbitrary and tyrannical.
Was Adam Smith the founder of modern economics? Dr. Patrick Newman joins the show for a look at Rothbard's treatment of economics before Smith and his take no prisoners revisionist approach.
Dr. Patrick Newman introduces the first in a series of episodes on Rothbard's History of Economic Thought.